CONTENTS
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
The Earl of Rossmore vs. the American Claimant—Viscount Berkeley
proposes to change places with the Claimant—The Claimant’s letter—Lord Berkeley
decides to visit America
CHAPTER II.
Colonel Mulberry Sellers and his art gallery—He receives a visit from
Washington Hawkins—Talking over old times —Washington informs the colonel that
he is the congressional delegate from Cherokee Strip.
CHAPTER III.
Mrs. Sellers pronounces the colonel “the same old scheming, generous,
good-hearted, moonshiny, hopeful, no-account failure he always was”—He takes in
Dan’l and Jinny—The colonel originates “Pigs in the Clover”—He offers one of
his art treasures to propitiate Suggs—One-armed Pete; the bank thief
CHAPTER IV.
A Yankee makes an offer for “Pigs in the Clover”—By the death of a relative
Sellers becomes the rightful Earl of Rossmore and consequently the American
Clairnant—Gwendolen is sent for from school—The remains of the late Claimant
and brother to be shipped to England—Hawkins and Sellers nail the hatchments on
“Rossmore Towers"
CHAPTER V.
Gwendolen’s letter—Her arrival at home—Hawkins is introduced, to his great
pleasure—Communication from the bank thief—Hawkins and Sellers have to wait ten
days longer before getting the reward—Viscount Berkeley and the late Claimant’s
remains start simultaneously from England and America
CHAPTER VI.
Arrival of the remains of late Claimant and brother in England —The usurping
earl officiates as chief mourner, and they are laid with their kindred in
Cholmondeley church—Sally Sellers a gifted costume-designer—Another
communication from the bank thief—Locating him in the New Gadsby—The colonel’s
glimpse of one—armed Pete in the elevator—Arrival of Viscount Berkeley at the
same hotel
CHAPTER VII.
Viscount Berkeley jots down his “impressions” to date with a quill pen—The
destruction of the New Gadsby by fire—Berkeley loses his bearings and escapes
with his journaled “impressions” only—Discovery and hasty donning of one-armed
Pete’s abandoned wardrobe—Glowing and affecting account in the morning papers
of the heroic death of the heir of Rossmore—He will take a new name and start
out “incog"
CHAPTER VIII.
The colonel’s grief at the loss of both Berkeley and one-armed
Pete—Materialization—Breaking the news to the family—The colonel starts to
identify and secure a body (or ashes) to send to the bereaved father
CHAPTER IX.
The usual actress and her diamonds in the hotel fire—The colonel secures three
baskets of ashes—Mrs. Sellers forbids their lying in state—Generous
hatchments—The ashes to be sent only when the earl sends for them
CHAPTER X.
Lord Berkeley deposits the $500 found in his appropriated clothes—Attends
“Mechanics’ Debating Club”—Berkeley (alias Tracy) is glad he came to
this country
CHAPTER XI.
No work for Tracy—Cheaper lodgings secured—Sleeping on the roof—“My daughter
Hattie”—Tracy receives further “impressions” from Hattie (otherwise “Puss”)—Mr.
Barrow appears—And offers to help Tracy find work
CHAPTER XII.
A boarding—house dinner—“No money, no dinner” for Mr. Brady—“How did you come
to mount that hat?”—A glimpse of (the supposed) one-armed Pete—Extract from
Tracy’s diary
CHAPTER XIII.
Tracy and trades-unions—Unpopularity with fellow-boarders—Which changes to
popularity on his punishing Allen—The cablegram
CHAPTER XIV.
“Mechanics’ Debating Club” again—Tracy is comforted by Barrow’s remarks—“Fool
or no fool, he would grab it”—“Earldom! oh, yes, take it if it
offers"
CHAPTER XV.
“You forgot to pay your board”—“I’ve been robbed “—Mr. Allen among the missing,
likewise other things—The cablegram: “Thanks”—Despair of Tracy—“You’ve got to
amuse your mind"
CHAPTER XVI.
The collaborative art collection—The artists—“The cannon’s our
trademark”—Tracy’s mind is amused
CHAPTER XVII.
No further cablegram—“If those ghastly artists want a confederate, I’m their
man”—Tracy taken into partnership—Disappointments of materialization —The
phonograph adapted to marine service —Utilization of wasted sewer gas
CHAPTER XVIII.
The colonel’s project to set Russia free—“I am going to buy Siberia”—The
materializee turns up—Being an artist he is invited to restore the colonel’s
collection—Which he forthwith begins
CHAPTER XIX.
The perplexities and nobilities of materialization—The materializee eats a
couple of apples—Horror of Hawkins and Sellers—It must be a mistake"
CHAPTER XX.
Tracy’s perplexities with regard to the Claimant’s sanity—The Claimant
interviews him—Sally Sellers meets Tracy —A violent case of love at first
sight—Pinks
CHAPTER XXI.
Empty painting; empty millinerizing—Tracy’s work satisfactory— Sellers’s new
picture of Lord Berkeley—“He is a wobbler”—The unsuccessful
dinner—parties—“They flung their arms about each other’s necks"
CHAPTER XXII.
“The materializing has got to stop where it is”—Sally Sellers repudiates “Lady
Gwendolen”—The late Lord Berkeley Sally’s hero—“The shady devil [Doubt] had
knifed her"
CHAPTER XXIII.
Tracy writes to his father—The rival houses to be united by his marriage to
Sally Sellers—The earl decides to “step over and take a hand”—“The course of
true love,” etc., as usual—“You an earl’s son! show me the signs"
CHAPTER XXIV.
Time drags heavily for all concerned—Success of “Pigs in the Clover”—Sellers is
“fixed” for his temperance lecture— Colonel and Mrs. Sellers start for
Europe—Interview of Hawkins and Sally—Tracy an impostor
CHAPTER XXV.
Telegram: “She’s going to marry the materializee”—Interview between Tracy and
Sally—Arrival of the usurping earl—“You can have him if you’ll take him”—A
quiet wedding at the Towers—Sellers does not join the party to
England—Preparing to furnish climates to order
APPENDIX.
The weather in this book